There are 4 pages and I need to go get ready for workin' at MAC! So I can't read it all right now. But this is how it goes down at my Macy's MAC:
We do the minimum purchase of $50 for a full application.
For an eye/lip demo, it is minimum purchase of 2 or more products.
For Face/blush matching, etc, we don't charge.
This goes for all week round.
After full applications, we write on the receipt that it was an application, and tell the customer that they can exchange/return product but they MUST keep at least 50 dollars worth.
We keep a list of chronic returners so we can keep track of who is honest or not.
For lashes, you just have to buy the lashes and we'll throw on a little liner/mascara too.
The other counters do makeup for free, but since we are TRAINED and always in demand we NEED to have minimum purchases because if we didn't, like everyone already said, we'd be doing makeup all day and nobody would make goal and we'd have to close down because nobody would buy anything.
It's really annoying though, the people that don't want to buy/try and return it all. They're such backstabbers. We're here helping them and then they just want to get it all for free and not help us in return. It's such BS, they're really bad people. If you don't have the money, or don't want to pay, then those people can just look shit for all I care. I could lose my job because of them not wanting to pay and returning stuff. It's sooo aggravating, you know?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Flammable
The last time I got a makeover at a counter I had a horrible experience. The MA clearly did not know what color foundation to use on my south asian skin and her bright pink blush placement on the wrong foundation left me with a bad taste in my mouth. I looked like a china doll, not a good look for me. Honestly speaking, some of the ladies here at Specktra who aren't even MAs do better makeup than some MAC MAs. Of course, some MAC MAs do great makeup on all skintones and ethnicities, it's just that my experience from the makeover wasn't good.
|
You probably already know this, but sometimes it is the MAC artist's first day/Freelancer's first day/first month, whatever. MAC Freelancers are not trained at all, they are just thrown onto the floor as an experiment to see how they act in the real environment. It's sort of like to see if they're worth training and stuff. Sometimes the MAs are already talented and knowlegeable, and sometimes they are not at all. It just takes time for the artist to get used to everything and learn about the product. After a few weeks/months of actually being hired as a real MAC artist are they trained.
Sometimes the artists don't have any footing and don't know much about product application. You may have run into one of those, and for that I am sorry. But the artist has to start somewhere, and hopefully this one has grown since that last application. Do you know what I mean though? Maybe it doesn't make any sense cuz I'm in a rush!!